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The Covenant at Mount Sinai

The Covenant and the Ten Commandments[a]

Chapter 19

God Proposes His Covenant.[b] Three months to the day after the children of Israel left the land of Egypt, they arrived in the Sinai Desert. They left the camp at Rephidim and arrived in the Desert of Sinai. There Israel camped in front of the mountain.

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Footnotes

  1. Exodus 19:1 The entire past of Israel converges on the event at Sinai. The call of Abraham and the deliverance from the Egyptian yoke show God’s intention to his people. The time has come for that people to respond to the divine preferences. The Covenant is not a contract between equals, in which offer and response are on the same level; rather, the initiative is entirely the Lord’s. Israel does, however, have an obligation to agree to the “salvation” offered to it and to express a desire to commit itself to fidelity to the law of the Lord. The text of the Covenant will be Israel’s religious and social constitution.
  2. Exodus 19:1 The Hebrews have reached the southern part of the Sinai peninsula; it is the imposing countryside dominated by this summit that serves as a backdrop for their meeting with God. In submitting themselves to the Lord, they will become a consecrated people. Thus, the People of God is truly born of the Sinaitic Covenant.